China’s Hainan Financial Supervision Bureau has formally banned real-world asset (RWA) tokenization and issued an explicit warning about fake exchange trading volume fraud, marking a regional enforcement escalation in the country’s ongoing crypto crackdown.
The directive targets the conversion of real-world assets, including property, commodities, and receivables, into on-chain tokens. It also flags fabricated exchange volume as a fraud mechanism used to lure investors into illegitimate schemes.
Global RWA Tokenization Market
$15B+
in on-chain tokenized real-world assets — a market now under direct regulatory fire in China. Source: rwa.xyz
Hainan Bureau Formally Prohibits RWA Tokenization
The Hainan Bureau’s notice prohibits financial institutions, platforms, and token issuers from engaging in RWA tokenization activities within its jurisdiction. The ban covers a broad range of asset categories typically associated with tokenization projects, from real estate and trade receivables to commodity-backed digital tokens.
The announcement was circulated through official channels, with the headline first gaining traction via crypto news channels on Telegram. The bureau’s action comes as seven major Chinese financial industry associations jointly declared that RWA tokenization constitutes illegal financial activity, reinforcing the national-level stance against digital asset issuance.
For RWA projects that had been exploring pathways into the Chinese market, the prohibition removes any remaining ambiguity. The directive applies to both domestic operators and platforms serving Chinese users from offshore, a distinction that widens the enforcement scope beyond prior guidance.
Fake Exchange Volume Flagged as a Core Fraud Vector
The second major component of the Hainan Bureau’s notice targets fake exchange trading volume, which regulators characterized as a deliberate fraud mechanism. The warning specifically calls out wash trading and artificial volume inflation used to fabricate liquidity on platforms promoting RWA tokens.
Estimated Wash-Traded Exchange Volume
~70%
of reported crypto trading volume on certain platforms is estimated to be artificial or wash-traded, according to BIS and academic research — the fraud vector Hainan Bureau specifically warned about. Source: BIS / academic estimates
The bureau’s framing links RWA tokenization schemes directly to volume manipulation. In this model, operators launch tokenized asset products, then inflate exchange volumes to create the appearance of market demand. Retail investors see high trading activity and assume the product is legitimate, only to discover the liquidity was fabricated.
The warning targets both domestic users and offshore platforms accessible to Chinese citizens. While no specific exchanges were named in the notice, the bureau indicated that enforcement actions could follow for platforms that facilitate these combined fraud patterns. This dual focus on regulatory enforcement against crypto platforms mirrors recent moves by other Asian authorities tightening oversight.
Penalties referenced in the directive include potential criminal prosecution under China’s existing financial fraud statutes, which carry significant prison terms for organizers of illegal fundraising schemes.
Regional Enforcement Closes a Perceived Loophole
Hainan’s position in this crackdown is notable. The Hainan Free Trade Port had cultivated a reputation as a fintech experimentation zone, with more permissive policies toward technology startups and financial innovation. Some RWA projects had positioned themselves near or within this zone, interpreting the province’s openness as a potential grey area for tokenization activities.
This ban closes that perceived loophole. The bureau-level directive aligns with, and in some respects extends, the sweeping national ban on RWA tokenization that China formalized in recent weeks. Multiple industry bodies, including those overseen by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), have now declared tokenized asset issuance illegal.
China’s baseline crypto enforcement dates to 2021, when authorities banned crypto mining and declared all cryptocurrency transactions illegal. The RWA-specific action represents a new phase: regulators are now targeting specific DeFi subcategories rather than issuing blanket prohibitions. This suggests that blockchain technology development in China will continue under increasingly narrow permitted use cases.
The Hainan directive is expected to prompt similar actions from other provincial financial bureaus. Several regions with active fintech sectors, including Shenzhen and Shanghai, have historically followed Hainan’s regulatory signals. A national-level RWA guidance document from the CSRC is anticipated, though no timeline has been officially confirmed.
For the global RWA market, which has grown rapidly through 2025 and into 2026, the Chinese enforcement action removes one of the largest potential addressable markets. Projects that had factored Chinese institutional or retail participation into their growth models will need to reassess, while broader crypto market conditions continue to reflect regulatory uncertainty across multiple jurisdictions.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.









